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Pop Rivet April 15th 04 08:39 PM

Finessing a dumb idea; question
 
Howdy,

Lots of experts here; never seen anyone here as neophyte as I am, so this
ought to be an easy one g

Love woodworking, but I'm disabled so most of my work is done while I'm on
my butt or one one of the occasional "good" days I get.

My problem: Our LR floor looks like an old school gymnasium floor that's
been ignored for a century and a half while the neighborhood kids and
wildlife used it for their playtimes. Oh, and the occasional spill & cat,
uh, "stuff".

I know HOW and WHATto do. Well, almost, anyway. My main problem is that it
takes a -long- time for me to do things.
Since I would like to refinish the floor as opposed to painting it, I get
the problem of having it lying in mid-conditioned/stained/poly'd/waxed
states for relatively long periods of time. Most areas I can put a sofa or
something over to protect for the durations, but ... well, that won't work
for the whole area. DW just won't allow it, plus occasionally I need to
pass a wheelchair thru the room. The specific question:

Is there a way to cover/protect the floor while it's "in process"?
Particularly pre-stain and post-stain. People would have to be able to walk
over it. There is no other passage in the house to use, so the LR must be
crossed.
The only thing I can think of is to put down one of those big blue tarps
sold everywhere for a few bucks, but I don't know what damage they might
cause to stained areas after a few days of traffic - if damage is an issue,
which I feel sure it must be. Do those tarps mark or distress a bare wood
or wood stains? All stains, finishes etc. would be oil - no water base.

Before anyone asks, yes, I know the pitfalls of lap marks, aging effects and
shade issues of differing drying durations, etc.. The boards are 2 1/2"
wide so I should be able to use board edges and a little 6-day masking tape
for transitions. The wood itself is actually in good shape, so I think as
long as I want a dark stain, sanding will be rather easy to accomplish, and
maybe a little work on some small-area discolorations. It had carpet over
it for about a hundred years.

Any & all polite or humorous ideas accepted with cheer and/or gratitude.

Thanks

Pop Rivet



Stephen M April 15th 04 09:12 PM

Finessing a dumb idea; question
 
Been there done that.

As you suspect, It's not a very good job for piecemeal work. Seriously, can
you send the family away for a long weekend? It can be done, start to finish
in 3 days.

Tape and plastic all the doors, or the dust from sanding will get
**everywhere**. Between coats lightly sand (to remove nibs), vac, vac again,
then maybe vac again. then wipe *everything* down with adampened cloth to
tack up the remaining dust. dust is the enemy.

The dust is so much of a problem that you DO NOT WANT to do this bit by bit.

I know, it's specifically what you asked to no hear but....

-s






"Pop Rivet" wrote in message
...
Howdy,

Lots of experts here; never seen anyone here as neophyte as I am, so this
ought to be an easy one g

Love woodworking, but I'm disabled so most of my work is done while I'm on
my butt or one one of the occasional "good" days I get.

My problem: Our LR floor looks like an old school gymnasium floor that's
been ignored for a century and a half while the neighborhood kids and
wildlife used it for their playtimes. Oh, and the occasional spill & cat,
uh, "stuff".

I know HOW and WHATto do. Well, almost, anyway. My main problem is that

it
takes a -long- time for me to do things.
Since I would like to refinish the floor as opposed to painting it, I

get
the problem of having it lying in mid-conditioned/stained/poly'd/waxed
states for relatively long periods of time. Most areas I can put a sofa

or
something over to protect for the durations, but ... well, that won't work
for the whole area. DW just won't allow it, plus occasionally I need to
pass a wheelchair thru the room. The specific question:

Is there a way to cover/protect the floor while it's "in process"?
Particularly pre-stain and post-stain. People would have to be able to

walk
over it. There is no other passage in the house to use, so the LR must be
crossed.
The only thing I can think of is to put down one of those big blue

tarps
sold everywhere for a few bucks, but I don't know what damage they might
cause to stained areas after a few days of traffic - if damage is an

issue,
which I feel sure it must be. Do those tarps mark or distress a bare wood
or wood stains? All stains, finishes etc. would be oil - no water base.

Before anyone asks, yes, I know the pitfalls of lap marks, aging effects

and
shade issues of differing drying durations, etc.. The boards are 2 1/2"
wide so I should be able to use board edges and a little 6-day masking

tape
for transitions. The wood itself is actually in good shape, so I think as
long as I want a dark stain, sanding will be rather easy to accomplish,

and
maybe a little work on some small-area discolorations. It had carpet over
it for about a hundred years.

Any & all polite or humorous ideas accepted with cheer and/or gratitude.

Thanks

Pop Rivet





ToolMiser April 15th 04 09:36 PM

Finessing a dumb idea; question
 
I don't have an answer to your problem, but why stain at all? Sand it down as
good as possible, and finish it. The worn rustic look is really pretty nice.
I put down some Used maple in a bedroom, sanded it, finished it, and it looks
beautiful. It has character! I don't think clear finish will show lap marks
as much as lapping stain. Just my opinion.

[email protected] April 16th 04 05:23 AM

Finessing a dumb idea; question
 
On Thu, 15 Apr 2004 15:39:30 -0400, "Pop Rivet"
wrote:


snip

refinish the floor


snip


Is there a way to cover/protect the floor while it's "in process"?



Thanks

Pop Rivet



rosin paper.

Pop Rivet April 16th 04 02:14 PM

Finessing a dumb idea; question
 
I was afraid I'd get responses like that: In fact, that's what I'd probably
tell anyone that asked that question too. Looks like back to the drawing
boards; I originally thought about carpet with a painted perimeter, so ...
who knows?
Wonder what my nephews are doing next weekend? Then wifey & I could both
go away for a weekend & have a good excuse to do it!

Thanks, appreciate the comeback.

Pop


"Pop Rivet" wrote in message
...
Howdy,

Lots of experts here; never seen anyone here as neophyte as I am, so this
ought to be an easy one g

Love woodworking, but I'm disabled so most of my work is done while I'm on
my butt or one one of the occasional "good" days I get.

My problem: Our LR floor looks like an old school gymnasium floor that's
been ignored for a century and a half while the neighborhood kids and
wildlife used it for their playtimes. Oh, and the occasional spill & cat,
uh, "stuff".

I know HOW and WHATto do. Well, almost, anyway. My main problem is that

it
takes a -long- time for me to do things.
Since I would like to refinish the floor as opposed to painting it, I

get
the problem of having it lying in mid-conditioned/stained/poly'd/waxed
states for relatively long periods of time. Most areas I can put a sofa

or
something over to protect for the durations, but ... well, that won't work
for the whole area. DW just won't allow it, plus occasionally I need to
pass a wheelchair thru the room. The specific question:

Is there a way to cover/protect the floor while it's "in process"?
Particularly pre-stain and post-stain. People would have to be able to

walk
over it. There is no other passage in the house to use, so the LR must be
crossed.
The only thing I can think of is to put down one of those big blue

tarps
sold everywhere for a few bucks, but I don't know what damage they might
cause to stained areas after a few days of traffic - if damage is an

issue,
which I feel sure it must be. Do those tarps mark or distress a bare wood
or wood stains? All stains, finishes etc. would be oil - no water base.

Before anyone asks, yes, I know the pitfalls of lap marks, aging effects

and
shade issues of differing drying durations, etc.. The boards are 2 1/2"
wide so I should be able to use board edges and a little 6-day masking

tape
for transitions. The wood itself is actually in good shape, so I think as
long as I want a dark stain, sanding will be rather easy to accomplish,

and
maybe a little work on some small-area discolorations. It had carpet over
it for about a hundred years.

Any & all polite or humorous ideas accepted with cheer and/or gratitude.

Thanks

Pop Rivet






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